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After local pushback, Indiana bill on wind, solar standards takes a '180 degree turn' - IndyStar

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A bill that would have overridden local ordinances that restrict or prohibit wind power in Indiana has taken a “180 degree turn” after pushback from local officials.

HB 1381 would establish statewide standards for how close wind and solar projects can be to other properties. But a new amendment would allow county and local governments to maintain restrictive ordinances, while also offering a hefty incentive for abandoning them.

The bill was amended in the Senate Utilities hearing Thursday morning to include the option for counties to adopt “renewable energy districts.” Essentially, these districts would provide a space for governments to approve wind projects — if a group of property owners want the turbines on their land — while maintaining local control over their siting.

The key is that the bill no longer requires localities to change their standards or approve projects as the previous iteration did. Instead, it dangles a carrot for them to do so.  

The amended bill establishes a one-time funding source for these local governments that could bring in as much as $3,000 per megawatt capacity of the wind project. One wind turbine alone has a capacity of  2.5 to 3 megawatts, meaning a wind project of multiple acres and dozens of turbines could bring in a significant boost to a local economy, legislators say.

This funding is an important bridge between lawmakers and local officials who have been concerned about wind projects’ impacts on nearby property values, said Sen. Mark Messmer, R-Jasper, who authored the 47-page amendment. 

“It allows some dollars to come in to help compensate the neighbors of those projects,” he said in the hearing. “We felt that was key.”

Wind turbine propellers and towers wait to be assembled in September 2012 at the E.ON Wildcat Wind Farm in Elwood.

The flexibility that this amendment puts back in the hands of local governments has some who previously opposed the bill now on board. 

Ryan Hoff with the Association of Indiana Counties said he came into the meeting ready to tell committee members why local control is so important, but said he feels it has been restored to the equation. 

He acknowledges that he needs to give the amendment a more thorough read, but “at first read … we feel that it addresses most if not all of those concerns,” Hoff said. “The concept of incentivizing local participation rather than removal of local control is one that we feel like we can get behind.”

More specifically, the amended bill: 

  • Creates default standards for wind and solar projects. It requires wind turbines to be set back from a nearby building by a distance at least three times the height of the wind turbine, or from the property line of any residential land by a distance at least two times the height of the wind turbine. Also establishes a one mile setback to state parks.
  • Grandfathers in any ordinance a local government has in effect by July 1, 2021 on wind projects, even if they are more restrictive than the bill’s default standards. 
  • For those counties without a wind ordinance, they may impose limitations on wind projects if they first adopt an ordinance that includes standards that are not more restrictive than the bill’s default standards.
  • Allows a local government to establish a renewable energy district, or RED zone, within the county where renewable projects can be located even if the county ordinance is more restrictive. This is an option if a group of landowners want these projects. 
  • Creates an incentive for RED zones in which the renewable company pays a one-time fee of up to $3,000 per megawatt of installed capacity to the local government, to be used how they decide.   
  • Limits the impacts of shadow flicker, an effect caused by sun passing through the turbine’s moving blades
  • Prohibits a local government from implementing a height limit for wind turbines that is more restrictive than the standards set by the Federal Aviation Administration, which vary depending on the site.
  • Limits the sound emitted from a wind turbine to an hourly average of 50 decibels, roughly as loud as a conversation.
  • Removes the appeals process before the state utility regulatory agency. Instead, interested parties may now appeal a renewable project decision in the local court with jurisdiction.  

While the amendment has earned the sign-off of some, others begrudgingly accepted the amendment, worried that the bill would move forward with or without it.

Susan Huhn, council president in Henry County, where wind projects have been the subject of heated debate and are restricted by county ordinances, said she still opposes HB 1381, although she supports the amendment if the bill must pass.